C Car Depreciation
Mercedes-Benz · suv · luxury

Mercedes-Benz GLC Depreciation Calculator

Calculate the Mercedes-Benz GLC depreciation rate by year, mileage, and country — with accident-history adjustments and a year-by-year depreciation chart.

The Mercedes-Benz GLC is a compact luxury SUV that competes directly with the BMW X3 and Audi Q5. Like most German luxury vehicles, it depreciates faster than mainstream SUVs once out of warranty, typically retaining around 48–52% of MSRP after five years as maintenance costs and technology aging weigh on resale value.

1-year depreciation
21%
5-year retention
50%
MSRP
$47,550–$63k
Avg mi / year
12,500

Depreciation inputs

Depreciation during your 5-year ownership
$27,525
-50%
Value at purchase
$55,050
Brand new
Value when you sell
$27,525
5y / 60,000 mi
Depreciation / year
$5,505
Depreciation / mi
$0.46
X254
2nd generation GLC · started 2023

Current generation — no successor has launched yet.

Depreciation curve · your ownership window

BuySell

Year-by-year depreciation

Depreciation rate per year, based on an MSRP of $55,050

Age Value % Retained Annual depreciation
New $55,050 100%
Year 1 $43,490 79% -$11,560 (21%)
Year 2 $37,985 69% -$5,505 (12.7%)
Year 3 $33,581 61% -$4,404 (11.6%)
Year 4 $30,278 55% -$3,303 (9.8%)
Year 5 $27,525 50% -$2,753 (9.1%)
Year 6 $24,222 44% -$3,303 (12%)
Year 7 $21,470 39% -$2,752 (11.4%)
Year 8 $18,717 34% -$2,753 (12.8%)
Year 9 $16,515 30% -$2,202 (11.8%)
Year 10 $14,864 27% -$1,651 (10%)

Mercedes-Benz GLC depreciation by country

The same car depreciates at different rates in different markets. Here's how the Mercedes-Benz GLC depreciation rate changes across the seven major markets we track.

🇺🇸
United States
Baseline

Baseline market and the GLC's best-selling region. Strong demand for 4MATIC trims in the Northeast and Midwest, while AMG variants depreciate faster due to thinner used-buyer pools and higher running costs.

Currency: USD Unit: mi
🇨🇦
Canada
-4% retention

Very similar curve to the US with slight premium for 4MATIC models in snowy provinces. Currency exposure and dealer servicing costs push retention ~3–4% below US levels.

Currency: CAD Unit: km
🇬🇧
United Kingdom
-8% retention

Popular company-car choice, but depreciation is steeper due to high new-car volumes and looming ULEZ pressure on older diesel variants. PHEV GLC 300e holds up better thanks to BIK tax advantages.

Currency: GBP Unit: mi
🇪🇺
Europe
-6% retention

Strong home-market demand, especially for diesel and PHEV variants. Depreciation is moderate but faster than Japanese rivals due to plentiful supply and expensive out-of-warranty repairs.

Currency: EUR Unit: km
🇸🇦
Saudi Arabia
+8% retention

Mercedes badge commands premium resale in Saudi Arabia, and the GLC is a popular family luxury SUV. V6 and AMG variants retain value especially well due to preference for larger engines.

Currency: SAR Unit: km
🇮🇳
India
-10% retention

Sold as a CKD-assembled luxury SUV with high acquisition costs. Resale is model-year sensitive and hurt by limited service network outside metros, though brand cachet supports second-owner demand.

Currency: INR Unit: km
🇦🇺
Australia
-3% retention

GLC is among the top-selling luxury SUVs in Australia, with solid retention for 300 4MATIC trims. Long distances and higher average mileage slightly accelerate depreciation beyond 5 years.

Currency: AUD Unit: km

Mercedes-Benz GLC depreciation after an accident

An accident on a vehicle's history permanently increases its depreciation rate, even after perfect repairs. Here's how much extra depreciation each severity level adds to a Mercedes-Benz GLC.

Minor accident
+9% depreciation

Paintwork, bumper scuffs, non-structural repairs. Disclosed on history reports but limited resale impact.

Moderate accident
+20% depreciation

Panel replacement, airbag deployment, meaningful CARFAX entry. Significantly accelerates depreciation.

Major accident
+35% depreciation

Frame damage, flood, salvage title. Permanent depreciation hit even after full restoration.

This "diminished value" is the extra depreciation a car carries after an accident. Insurance rarely reimburses it — our calculator bakes it into every depreciation estimate.

Mercedes-Benz GLC FAQ

How much does a Mercedes-Benz GLC depreciate per year?
A new GLC typically depreciates about 21% in the first year and 8–10% each year after that. By year five, the GLC retains roughly 50% of its original MSRP, which is in line with the BMW X3 and slightly behind the Lexus NX. Depreciation accelerates again after year seven when out-of-warranty repair costs become a factor.
What is a Mercedes-Benz GLC worth after 5 years?
A GLC 300 4MATIC with an MSRP around $52,000 will typically be worth $25,000–$27,000 after 5 years and 62,500 miles. Well-optioned examples with clean service records can fetch the higher end, while AMG 63 variants depreciate more steeply in absolute dollars despite the higher starting price.
Does the GLC depreciate faster than a BMW X3 or Lexus NX?
The GLC and BMW X3 depreciate at roughly similar rates, losing about 50% over 5 years. The Lexus NX notably outperforms both, retaining closer to 58–62% thanks to Lexus's reliability reputation and lower ownership costs. Buyers prioritizing resale often choose the NX, while GLC buyers prioritize refinement and brand cachet.
How much does an accident affect GLC resale value?
A minor accident reduces resale by about 9%, a moderate accident by roughly 20%, and a major accident with structural damage can cut value by 35% or more. Luxury SUVs like the GLC are particularly sensitive to Carfax records because luxury buyers expect pristine histories.
Is the AMG GLC 63 a bad choice for depreciation?
The AMG GLC 63 S loses more dollars in absolute terms due to its ~$85,000 MSRP, but percentage retention is similar to the GLC 300 in the first 3 years thanks to enthusiast demand. After year 5, depreciation accelerates faster than the base GLC as maintenance, tires, and fuel costs deter second and third owners.

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